Tracking the occurrence and fate of human bocavirus 2 in municipal wastewater from a small city
Sharon C. Kosgei, Olivia N. Birch, Roberto A. Rodriguez, Monica Kpabar, Kendall L. Ratliff, Justin C. Greaves

TL;DR
This study tracks the presence and persistence of human bocavirus 2 in wastewater over a year, showing it is common and resistant to treatment.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the environmental stability and seasonal patterns of HBoV2 in municipal wastewater.
Findings
HBoV2 was detected in 93.8% of influent samples with seasonal peaks in summer and fall.
HBoV2 decayed slowly (k = 0.10 d⁻¹) and persisted through secondary wastewater treatment.
Phylogenetic analysis showed HBoV2 clustered with globally circulating lineages.
Abstract
Human Bocavirus 2 (HBoV2) is an emerging enteric virus frequently detected in wastewater, yet its environmental fate, persistence, and treatment remain poorly understood. Improved characterization of HBoV2 is important for advancing wastewater-based epidemiology and understanding viral transmission dynamics. A year-long wastewater surveillance study was conducted from December 2023 to December 2024 in a small urban wastewater treatment system. Viral concentrations were quantified using digital PCR (dPCR), decay kinetics were assessed using controlled mesocosm experiments, and phylogenetic relationships were evaluated through NP1 gene sequencing. HBoV2 was detected in 93.8% of influent samples (average 4.76 log₁₀ genome copies per liter (GC/L) ) with seasonal peaks in summer and fall. Phylogenetic analysis revealed clustering with globally circulating HBoV2 lineages. Decay experiments…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRespiratory viral infections research · Viral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology · SARS-CoV-2 detection and testing
